Mon, Sep 29, 2003 - Page 5 News List

S Korea plans transit camp in Mongolia

REFUGEE HAVEN Although Mongolia is at least two days from North Korea's border by train, people fleeing the communist nation have trickled into the remote territory

NY TIMES NEWS SERVICE , ULAN BATOR, MONGOLIA

Joel Charny, an executive with Refugees International, a Washington-based group, said the North Korean refugees he interviewed in China last year all wanted simply to live safely in China, near their families in North Korea.

"For them, Mongolia might as well be another planet," he said.

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